While Levi Hill supposedly invented color photography in the 1850s, it was the Lumiere brothers who devised the first commercially viable photographic process. Here's a collection of interesting color photographs in the early 20th century. Women under a tree, c. 1915. A woman and boy in a chair, c. 1915. A woman and flowers, c. 1915. Children and teachers, c. 1910. A woman in red dress, c. 1915. Silver Lake,1907-1932. Women with a Happy Easter/Buy Kodak sign, c. 1917. Seneca pool, 1924. A woman in a greenhouse, c.1910. A girl with dolls, c. 1910. The Palace of Horticulture at the Pan American Exposition in San Francisco, 1915. A woman on a rock in a garden, c. 1910-15. A man and his dogs, c. 1915. Foolish House at the Ontario Beach Park, 1910. Letchworth State Park, New York, c. 1915. An urban outdoor market, c. 1910. A woman in costume, c. 1915. A row of young women, 1907-1932. A popular beach, c. 1915. A baby, c. 1915. Swimmers at Fine View, 1907-1932. A young couple, c. 1920. Charles Zoller with his bicycle, c. 1920. Sisters, c. 1909, Killara, Australia. A nurse and child, c. 1907-1932, by Charles C. Zoller. Nurses and "Uncle Sam" at a WWI support parade, US, c. 1917, by Charles C. Zoller. Family group, c. 1915. Native American man, c. 1910, by Mrs. Benjamin F. Russell. Woman in a throne, c. 1915. Arnett YMCA, USA, 1907-1932. Villa Bonnier, Stockholm, c. 1930. Louis Lumiere, of the Lumiere brothers, inventors, film innovators, and creators of the autochrome itself. c. 1910. Woman with a crazy pinecone-feather hat, c. 1910. Street and castle view, Foix, France, c. 1903, by Eugene Trutat.